跟读练习: Intro to Psychology: Crash Course Psychology #1 - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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That dream about the dinosaur and the leotard.
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That dream about the dinosaur and the leotard.
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Those times that you said that thing that you know you shouldn't have said, or even that thing you didn't even know you were gonna say.
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The little cogs of your consciousness cranking away, making your life possible, making society function, all of the things that you're so glad you can do,
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and all of the ones you wish you could stop doing.
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Excluding other human minds, your mind is the most complicated piece of the universe that humans currently know about.
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The rules that govern it are mysterious and elusive.
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Maybe our brains just aren't complex enough to understand themselves, but that's not going to stop us from trying.
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The word psychology comes from the Latin for the study of the soul, and while its formal definition has evolved over the last several decades,
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today we can safely call it the science of behavior and mental processes.
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The term psychology wasn't coined until around the turn of the 16th century, and a practice that we would actually call science today wasn't established until the mid-1800s.
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Of course, humans have always been curious about themselves and what's going on up here.
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Aristotle pondered the seed of human consciousness and decided that it was in the heart, not the head, being, as we have seen quite a lot here on Crash Course,
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absolutely and completely wrong.
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Two thousand years ago, Chinese rulers conducted the world's first psychological exams, requiring public officials to take personality and intelligence tests.
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And in the late 800s, Persian Dr. Mohammed Ibn Zakaria al-Razi, also known as Razi's, was one of the first to describe mental illness,
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and even treated patients in what was essentially a very early psych ward in his Baghdad hospital.
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From the efforts of those early thinkers up until today, the field of psychology has been all about tackling some of the big questions.
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How can humans do horrible things like commit genocide and torture other humans, and how come we know those things are horrible?
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Do we have free will, or are we simply driven by our environment, biology, and non-conscious influences?
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What is mental illness, and what can we do about it?
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And what is consciousness, or the notion of self?
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If I lose my awareness of myself, am I still human?
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I don't know!
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But over the next six months, these are the questions that we're going to be exploring together.
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How our brains work, how they can break, how they can be healed, why we behave the way we do, even when we don't want to, and what it means to be thinking and feeling and alive.
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When hearing the word psychology, most people probably think of a therapist listening to a patient unpacking the details of his day while reclining on a couch.
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Maybe that therapist is wearing glasses, chewing on a cigar, stroking his whiskered chin.
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Admit it, if you're thinking about psychology, you're probably picturing Freud.
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Sigmund Freud was one of the most tremendously influential and controversial thinkers of his maybe of all time.
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His theories helped build our views on childhood, personality, dreams, and sexuality, and his work fueled a legacy of both support and opposition.
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His life was long and spanned an important swath of history from the American Civil War to World War II.
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But like most great scientists, Freud developed his revolutionary ideas by building on the work of others.
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And of course, innovation in the field didn't stop with him.
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In truth, psychology is one of the most wildly diverse sciences in terms of the questions it proposes, the methods it applies, and the different schools of thought and disciplines it contains.
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Perhaps more than any other science, psychology is just a big ol' integrative melting pot.
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For instance, right around Freud's time, there were a lot of different schools of thought about how the study of the human mind should be tackled.
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Mainly, there were the ideas of structuralism, functionalism, and psychoanalysis.
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Scientific psychology got its start in 1879 in Germany, when physician Wilhelm Wundt set up the first psychology laboratory at
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the University of Leipzig just a few years after publishing his Principles of Physiological Psychology, considered the first true psychology textbook.
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Wundt and his student Edward Bradford Titchener took cues from chemists
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and physicists and argued that if those people could break down all matter into simple elements or structures, why couldn't they do the same for the brain?
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They tried to understand the structures of consciousness by getting patients to look inward, asking them how they felt when they watched a sunset,
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or smelled a coffee, or licked a kitten, or whatever.
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Titchener named this approach structuralism, but despite its rigid sounding name, it really relied so much on introspection that it became too subjective.
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I mean, you make sense and feel something different than I do, even if we lick the same kitten.
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Psychologists, of course, can't actually observe a patient's inner thoughts or feelings, so ultimately the structuralist school of thought is fairly short-lived.
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By contrast, American physician and philosopher William James proposed a different set of questions, focusing on why we think and feel and smell and lick or whatever.
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Basically, he focused on the function of behavior.
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This approach, functionalism, was inspired by Charles Darwin's idea that adaptive behaviors are conserved throughout the evolutionary process.
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James published his seminal book, The Principles of Psychology, in 1890, defining psychology as the science of mental life,
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just as Freud was starting to flex his big brain.
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Sigmund Freud began his medical career at a Viennese hospital, but in 1886, he started his own practice specializing in nervous disorders.
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During this time, Freud witnessed his colleague Josef Breuer treat a patient called Anna Oh with a new talking cure.
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Basically, it just let her talk about her symptoms.
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The more she talked and pulled up traumatic memories, the more her symptoms were reduced.
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It was a breakthrough, and it changed Freud forever.
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From then on, Freud encouraged his patients to talk freely about whatever came to mind, to free associate.
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This technique provided the basis for his career and an entire branch of psychology.
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In 1900, he published his book The Interpretation of Dreams, where he introduced his theory of psychoanalysis.
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Now, you probably think of psychoanalysis as a treatment, the whole patient on the couch scenario, and that's definitely part of it.
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But Freud's concept was actually a lot more complex than that, and it was revolutionary.
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The radical kernel of psychoanalysis was the theory that our personalities are shaped by unconscious motives.
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Basically, Freud suggested that we're all profoundly affected by mental processes that we're not even aware of.
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Now that sounds almost obvious to us now, but part of the genius of Freud's theory was that in 1900, it wasn't obvious at all.
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The idea that our minds could be driven by something that our minds themselves didn't know about was hard to grasp.
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As hard as, like, uh, maybe organisms evolving by natural selection.
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It was abstract, invisible, and there was something about it that seemed irrational.
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The other important part of Freud's theory was that the subconscious, literally the thing below consciousness, was still discoverable.
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Even though you weren't aware of it, you could come to understand it through a therapeutic technique that used dreams,
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projections, and free association to root out repressed feelings and gain self-insight.
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So what Freud was really saying was that mental disorders could be healed through talk therapy and self-discovery.
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And this was a really big breakthrough, because prior to this, people with mental illnesses would be confined to sanatoriums, and at best, given menial labor to do,
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and at worst, shackled to a bed frame.
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After the interpretation of dreams, Freud went on to publish over 20 more books, and countless papers, with an iconic cigar in hand all the while.
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He believed smoking helped him think, but it also helped him get jaw cancer.
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During the last 16 years of his life, underwent at least 30 painful operations while continuing to smoke.
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By the late 1930s, the Nazis had taken over Austria and Freud and his Jewish family narrowly escaped to England.
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By September 1939, the pain in his cancerous jaw was too great
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and a doctor friend assisted him in suicide through morphine injection.
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He was 83.
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Whether you love him or hate him, and make no mistake, plenty of people vehemently disagreed with him, there's no question that Freud's impact on psychology was monumental.
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While competing theories in the young field of psychology either fell away or evolved into something else, psychoanalysis remains an important concept and practice today.
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The next big shakeup rolled in during the first half of the 20th century when behaviorism gained a higher profile.
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Heavy hitters like Ivan Pavlov, John B.
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Watson, and B.F.
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Skinner were key players here.
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They focused on the study of observable behavior.
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You may remember Skinner as the dude who put rats
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and pigeons and babies in boxes and conditioned them to perform certain behaviors, right around when Freud escaped to England, Skinner published his Behavior of Organisms,
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ushering in the era of behaviorism, which remained all the rage well into the 1960s.
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The other major force at the time was, of course, Freud's psychoanalysis and its many descendants, collectively known as the psychodynamic theories.
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These focused on the importance of early experiences in shaping the unconsciousness and how that process affects our thoughts, feelings, behaviors, and personalities.
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By the mid-20th century, other major forces in psychology were also brewing.
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Schools we'll explore later in this course, including humanist psychology, which focuses on nurturing personal growth,
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cognitive science, and neuroscience, all of which contributed their own unique takes on the study of mind.
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Today's formal definition of psychology, the study of behavior and mental processes, is a nice amalgamation that pulls from all these different schools of thought.
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It recognizes the need for observing and recording behavior, whether that's screaming, crying, or playing air saxophone to an imaginary audience.
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But it also gives credit to our mental processes, what we think and feel and believe while we're tearing it up on our invisible instruments.
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Because again, the point that I really want you to take home is that psychology is an integrative science.
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Yes, folks still get grumpy and disagree plenty, but the essence of the discipline has everything to do with creating different ways of asking interesting questions
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and attempting to answer them through all kinds of data gathering methods.
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The human mind is complicated.
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There is no single way to effectively crack it open.
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It must be pried at from all sides.
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Harvard astronomer Owen Gingrich has gazed into the distant horizons of space, and even he has acknowledged
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that the human brain is by far the most complex physical object known to us in the entire cosmos.
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And we all get to have one!
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Of our very own!
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Knock it around right up in here.
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We here at Crash Course are really excited to spend the next several months delving into the world of psychology, how it applies to our lives, our minds, and our hearts,
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and how it deepens our understanding of each other, our world, and ourselves.
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Thanks for watching this first lesson in Crash Course Psychology, and I'd like to especially thank all of our Subable subscribers, without whom we would literally not be able to do this.
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Would you like a personalized, signed Crash Course Chemistry Periodic Table, or even to see yourself animated in one of our episodes?
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To find out about these and other perks, go to subbable.com slash crash course.
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And thanks to our crew!
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This episode was written by Kathleen Yale and edited by Blake DiPastino.
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Our psychology consultants is Dr. Ranjit Bhagwat.
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Our director and editor is Nicholas Jenkins.
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The script supervisor was Michael Aranda, who is also our sound designer.
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And our graphics team is Thought Cafe.

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背景与背景

在心理学的入门课程中,讲者探讨了人类意识的复杂性以及心理学的发展历程。心理学被视为对行为和心理过程的科学研究,它的起源可以追溯到数千年前。当讨论心理学时,人们通常会想到精神分析、行为心理学等流派,以及诸如西格蒙德·弗洛伊德等影响深远的心理学家。随着时间的推移,心理学不断演变,吸纳了各种思想与方法。这为学习英语的过程提供了了不起的视角,帮助我们理解人类思想与交流的微妙之处。

日常交流的五个重要短语

  • ‘你知道吗?’ (Did you know?) - 引出有趣的信息,有助于在交流中引起对方的兴趣。
  • ‘按照我的理解...’ (From my understanding...) - 表达个人的观点与理解,促进更深入的讨论。
  • ‘这让我想起了...’ (This reminds me of...) - 在对话中联系相关经验或情景,增强表达的连贯性。
  • ‘我们可以考虑...’ (We could consider...) - 提出建议或可行的方案,有助于鼓励团队合作。
  • ‘你怎么看这个问题?’ (What do you think about this?) - 询问他人观点,促进互动与对话。

逐步影子跟读指南

为了提高英语发音和口语能力,可以使用影子跟读的方法。通过对视频内容的学习,逐步掌握语音、语调及表达技巧是非常有效的。以下是一些具体步骤:

  1. 选择合适的材料: 找到适合自己水平的视频,例如心理学相关的入门课程。
  2. 仔细聆听: 身临其境地聆听讲者的话,关注其发音及语调。
  3. 分段模仿: 将视频内容分成小段落,逐句进行模仿,确保跟上讲者的速度和情感。
  4. 反复练习: 听完一段后,尝试独立复述。记录自己的声音,进行对比,看看需要改进的地方。
  5. 反馈与调整: 可以请他人给予反馈,确保自己的发音以及语调与原声尽可能接近。

通过这样的方式,不仅能够提高英语口语能力,还能帮助理解心理学领域的基本概念,加强针对雅思口语练习的准备。坚持练习,您会发现自己的英语水平有显著进步!

什么是跟读法?

跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。

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